Tomatos

Mr.potatohead

Leafing Out
Joined
Apr 19, 2008
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
22
Hi all. This is my first post on the easygarden forum. I'm a member on the backyard chickens forum and that site is a great resourse for information and i'm sure this one will be as well. My question is this: At what time in the spring in the northeast do you plant tomato plants in the ground? I'm talking about young plants that have been started in a greenhouse or indoors. Thank you for any responses.
 

patandchickens

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Nov 23, 2007
Messages
2,537
Reaction score
3
Points
153
Location
Ontario, Canada
If you're not going to do anything active to protect them against frost, then just after your last frost date.

If you're willing to go out and throw a box or something over each plant in the event of a forecast suggestive of possible late frost, then a week or two earlier -- more, if you're willing to take a chance. Early planting is more worthwhile if it's a warm spring than if it's a cold one.

If you pre-warm the soil and put a Wall-o-water (or similar product) around each plant, you can push the season as much as 4-6 weeks depending on your luck. Note that *some* years, wall-o-waters will sorta backfire, as you'll ahve early hot weather that will 'cook' the plant unless you remove the wall-o-waters and then, Murphy's Law, you tend to have a later cold snap that you forget to put boxes over the tomatoes :p

In any case, make sure the plants are well hardened off before putting out -- if they're from a store, ask about their history or assume they're not hardened off.

Have fun,

Pat
 

Mr.potatohead

Leafing Out
Joined
Apr 19, 2008
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
Points
22
Thank you very much patandchickens for your reply, I will take your advice for sure.
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
26,615
Reaction score
32,054
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)

SewingDiva

Garden Ornament
Joined
Apr 15, 2008
Messages
164
Reaction score
0
Points
88
Location
Westwood, MA - Zone 6
I learned a great tomato trick years ago from a much more experienced gardener and I've done this every year with great results:

Peter's Perfect Tomatos

When you transplant do the following:

1) Dig a hole as deep as the seedling height and twice as wide as the seedling.

2) Fill the hole 1/2 way with a 50/50 combination of peat moss and composted manure.

3) Water the mix and make a thick mud. The water should contain a transplant fertilizer (organic or chemical - your choice)

4) Plant the seedling in the mud and bury it past the original seedling leaves. The tomato will sprout new roots from the buried stem.

5) Water as required for the rest of the summer but do not fertilize again - the tomato has everything it will need for the entire season.

Your tomatos will go gangbusters - trust me! Heirlooms in particular really like it.

~Phyllis
 
Top